, at Petra, is believed to be Aretas IV's
mausoleum. Aretas' daughter,
Phasaelis of Nabataea, married
Herod Antipas, otherwise known as Herod the Tetrarch. Phasaelis fled to her father when she discovered her husband intended to divorce her in order to take a new wife,
Herodias, mother of
Salome. Herodias was already married to his brother,
Herod II, who died around AD 33/34. Antipas married Herodias. According to Christian accounts, it was opposition to this marriage that led to the beheading of John the Baptist. However, the Jewish-Roman historian Josephus depicts John's execution instead as being a preemptive effort to prevent a rebellion. Aretas invaded Herod Antipas' domain and defeated his army, partly because soldiers from the region of
Philip the Tetrarch (a third brother) gave assistance to King Aretas. Josephus does not identify these auxiliary troops (he calls them 'fugitives'), but Moses of Chorene identifies them as being the army of King Abgarus of Edessa. Antipas was able to escape only with the help of Roman forces.
Herod Antipas then appealed to Emperor
Tiberius, who dispatched the governor of Syria,
Lucius Vitellius the Elder, to attack Aretas. Vitellius gathered his legions and moved southward, stopping in Jerusalem for the passover of AD 37, when news of the emperor's death arrived. The invasion of Nabataea was never completed. The Christian Apostle
Paul says that he had to sneak out of Damascus in a basket through a window in the wall to escape the
ethnarch of King Aretas (
2 Corinthians 11:32, 33). Proposals that control of Damascus was gained by King Aretas between the death of
Herod Philip in 33/34 AD and his death in 40 AD are contradicted by substantial evidence against Aretas controlling the city before 37 AD and many reasons why it could not have been a gift from Caligula between 37 and 40 AD. Most uncertainty stems from whether troops belonging to Aretas actually controlled the city, or if Paul was referring to "the official in control of a Nabataean community in Damascus, and not the city as a whole." Several have proposed that Aretas briefly annexed Damascus after 37 AD. Aretas IV died in AD 40 and was succeeded by his son
Malichus II and daughter
Shaqilath II. ==See also==